With sunburned leaves ----- if the burned region dries and hardens right up, then it's absolutely ok to keep the leaf.
I've had burned leaves on catts before - due to those same hot intense days conditions. Similar percentage of burning on particular leaves as you described. The leaves just dried and hardened - no issue. I just allowed the leaves to stay as-is.
The blackened appearance of burned orchid leaves certainly does look concerning at first - but we can totally relax once the region dries up and feels very hard to the touch.
Just monitor the situation and maintain good air-flow around the whole plant. It should pan out just fine.
We only need to intervene (like remove leaf portions or apply some Yates Anti-Rot etc) if the affected regions appear to spread significantly when we don't expect it to.
On the other hand - for aesthetic purposes - if the orchid has plenty of leaves already, then there's always the option of snipping off burned regions - just to achieve a mainly green appearance. Otherwise - just leave the orchid as-is. The battle scars gives some individuality, and surviving scorched leaves can still carry out their function.
For my orchids - I keep scorched surviving leaves. I usually don't get scorched leaves though. But it can happen sometimes.
Last edited by SouthPark; 01-14-2020 at 07:06 AM..
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